Fighter is Glendale’s badge of honor

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
Aug 19 2004

Fighter is Glendale’s badge of honor

Vanes Martirosyan is the most prominent success story from local
boxing program that is due for a comeback in September.

By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press

GLENDALE – When Vanes Martirosyan went to Rosemont Middle School, he
had a tendency to be disruptive. An energetic boy and an aspiring
boxer, the Armenian-born kid would lose his focus, leading to
trouble.

Once, his guidance counselor at Rosemont wanted to suspend him.
Instead, Officer Ron Williams, who ran Glendale’s Police Athletic
League youth boxing program, made a deal with the counselor: If Vanes
slacks off, Williams will suspend him from boxing.

“I suspended him two times,” Williams said. “Each time, he came back
with more dedication and determination, and his schooling improved.”

Now, Martirosyan is an 18-year-old welterweight fighter representing
the United States in the Olympics. Today, he will fight Cuba’s
Lorenzo Aragon, a two-time world champion.

Martirosyan should be the poster boy for the Police Department’s
boxing program, which has produced several successful professionals
but no other Olympians. He joined the program at 7, a few months shy
of the minimum age requirement – Williams made an exception for him.
He quickly became one of the program’s best boxers. By 14,
Martirosyan outgrew the program, and Williams recommended another
gym, where he could get sponsorship to travel to the top tournaments.

The poster boy image has one problem. For now, the Police
Department’s boxing program, designed to give discipline and
direction to troubled youth, is in hibernation.

The program lost its venue last year, when Roosevelt Middle School
underwent major renovations. Then, facing budget cuts, the department
reassigned Williams from the Police Activities League to regular
patrol.

“Some of the kids who are looking to have a way to get rid of their
frustrations and get their discipline, this is a good venue for
them,” Mayor Bob Yousefian said. “They come in and punch the bags.
This is a way to take aggravation out on a bag rather than a person.
It’s keeping a lot of at-risk youth out of jails, and it’s generating
less headaches for the police department.”

Sgt. Ron Insalaco said the program will be back in September at
Wilson Middle School, with a civilian and a sworn officer running the
program. Williams will not be involved, Insalaco said.

Martirosyan is the program’s most high-profile success story, but
he’s not the only one. William Abelyan, a featherweight, has a 23-5
record. William Adamyan, a light welterweight, has a 9-1 record.
Ernie Zavala, a light welterweight with an 18-3 record, trains with
Freddie Roach, Mike Tyson’s trainer.

Just as important, Williams said, are the people who joined the
program and never had success in the sport.

“Even if a kid can’t box or had no athletic ability, when he or she
put on that [Police Athletic League] shirt, there was a sense of
pride,” Williams said. “It’s difficult to weigh the program’s
success, but from the comments I get today, it’s clear that it’s a
valuable asset to the department and the city.”

Martirosyan’s success is a little easier to measure. Entering the
Olympic qualifying tournament, he was ranked the No. 14 amateur
welterweight, and he shocked most boxing experts by grabbing the
welterweight Olympic spot. After he dominated Algeria’s Benamar
Meskine, 45-20, in his opening fight Sunday, NBC’s Olympic website
called him “America’s Longest Shot.” If he beats Aragon today, that
long shot may have a golden shot.

“I’m positive he’s going to win a gold medal,” Williams said. “You
heard it here first. Positive.”

RFE/RL Iran Report – 08/17/2004

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Iran Report
Vol. 7, No. 27, 17 August 2004

A Review of Developments in Iran Prepared by the Regional Specialists
of RFE/RL’s Newsline Team

************************************************************
HEADLINES:
* PROTESTS MARK JOURNALISTS DAY
* TEHRAN BARS BAHAI STUDENTS FROM UNIVERSITY STUDIES
* NEW PROVINCE GETS A GOVERNOR
* PARLIAMENT WANTS NUCLEAR PURSUITS TO CONTINUE
* TEHRAN VOWS RESPONSE IN EVENT OF ‘U.S. OR NON-U.S.
AGGRESSION’
* PAKISTANI FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS TEHRAN
* KHATAMI CALLS FOR CLOSER TIES ON AZERBAIJAN VISIT
* IRAN ENCOURAGES NORWEGIAN INVESTMENT
* IRANIANS SEE CONSPIRACY BEHIND DIPLOMAT’S KIDNAPPING IN
IRAQ
* AN IRANIAN CALL TO ARMS IN IRAQ
************************************************************

PROTESTS MARK JOURNALISTS DAY. Iranian reporters staged a 24-hour
sit-in and hunger strike on 7 August to mark Journalists Day, the
Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) reported.
The same day, President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami
stressed the importance of freedom of expression in a speech marking
the day, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported. According
to Khatami’s statement, which was read out by Islamic Culture and
Guidance Minister Ahmad Masjid-Jamei, “Press freedom will be
available if the press community enjoys political immunity and the
journalists are provided with job security.” Khatami said the low
level of legal support for the press has retarded cultural
development.
President Khatami discussed freedom of expression on 9 August
in a lengthy speech on the state news agency’s 70th anniversary.
Khatami said that journalists must have security, state television
reported, and he stressed the importance of freedom of expression. At
the same time, Khatami said, there are boundaries and democracies
have rules and regulations, too. “The interests of society should be
the yardstick in all economic, cultural, and news-distribution
spheres,” he said.
Khatami added that the information explosion of recent years
has had many benefits, but it is dangerous, too. Its danger is no
less than that of censorship. He warned that people are overloaded
with information and “the powers-that-be” try to take advantage of
this situation. Khatami said Iran is threatened by “propaganda and
cultural plots.” He hinted vaguely that powerful states take
advantage of their military, economic, political, and cultural might
to further their own interests.
Reformist journalist Emadedin Baqi apparently crossed the
boundaries mentioned by Khatami. Baqi and attorney Saleh Nikbakht
appeared in court on 6 August because of a complaint filed by the
Intelligence and Security Ministry, “Iran Daily” reported on 8
August. The complaint relates to Baqi’s banned book “Tragedy of
Democracy in Iran.” Baqi told the judge that the information in the
book was published previously in newspaper articles, and he was tried
for those articles two times.
The “Nasim-i Saba” daily apparently went too far also.
Managing director Hojatoleslam Rasul Montajabnia said on 9 August
that the Press Court has banned publication of his newspaper,
“Jomhuri-yi Islami” reported on 10 August. Montajabnia said news of
the ban came via an unsigned and undated letter citing the orders of
a “Judge Husseinian.” The ban is on the basis of a complaint from the
daily’s former managing director, Majid Qasemi-Feyzabadi. (Bill
Samii)

TEHRAN BARS BAHAI STUDENTS FROM UNIVERSITY STUDIES. Diane Alai, the
Bahai community’s representative to the United Nations, told
Radio Farda on 11 August that Bahai high-school students who pass the
university entrance exam are not being allowed to enter institutions
of higher learning in Iran. In previous years, she explained,
applicants had to declare their religious affiliation when
registering for the exam. The question on religion was omitted on the
applications this year, however, while the exam results identified
the individuals as Muslims. Students who corrected the mistake were
denied admission. Bani Dugal, a Bahai representative, said, “The
Iranian government is, in effect, attempting to force Bahai youth to
recant their faith if they want to go to university,” according to a
press release from the Bahai International Community
(). By taking the exam at
all, according to reports from Iran described in the press release,
“officials are saying that their action amounts to a de facto
declaration of faith in Islam.” (Bill Samii)

POLITICAL ORGANIZATION BANNED. Abbas Sheibani, a member of Iran’s
Parties House, said on 10 August that the Freedom Movement is not
allowed to join the organization, “Iran Daily” reported on 11 August.
He noted that it cannot become a member because it does not have a
permit from the Article 10 Commission. Article 10 of the law on
parties specifies that a commission — the Article 10 Commission —
of one Interior Ministry official, two parliamentarians, and two
judiciary representatives will issue party permits and dissolve
parties acting illegally. Sheibani added that because the Freedom
Movement is a banned group, statements by its leaders are against the
constitution and the Islamic system. (Bill Samii)

IRANIAN STATE ENTERPRISES AUDITED. Radio Farda economic commentator
Fereidun Khavand reported on 5 August that the national accounting
office has audited the 2003-04 books of 1,705 state enterprises. It
found that 1,006 were profitable, 583 were losing money, and 116
showed neither profit nor loss, Khavand said. Moreover, according to
press reports cited by Radio Farda, more of those enterprises would
have shown losses had the accounting office not used the statements
they provided. Details on the profits and losses were not provided,
but state enterprises consume 65 percent of the government’s
budget, according to Radio Farda. (Bill Samii)

NEW PROVINCE GETS A GOVERNOR. Ebrahim Rezai-Babadi, formerly the
Tehran governor-general’s assistant for political-security
affairs, was sworn in on 12 August as the governor-general of
Southern Khorasan Province, IRNA reported. The creation of Southern
Khorasan Province, as well as Razavi Khorasan and Northern Khorasan
provinces, came about through the division of northwestern Khorasan
Province in 2004 (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 3 May and 14 June 2004).
(Bill Samii)

GUARDIANS COUNCIL WANTS CLEAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS. Ayatollah Ahmad
Jannati, the secretary of the Guardians Council, the conservative-led
body that supervises elections and confirms voting results, said in
Tehran on 4 August that proper supervision of the 2005 presidential
elections is “very important” and authorities must ensure “there are
no violations,” “Aftab-i Yazd” reported on 5 August. “People must be
sure that the vote they drop in is the one that comes out,” Jannati
told a gathering of election inspectors. The Guardians Council’s
supervision of February’s legislative elections was “more
successful than past rounds,” he said. The council publicly clashed
with the reformist-led government and Interior Ministry, which
organized the voting, after the Guardians Council banned thousands of
candidates, and many sitting legislators, from running in the
election. It will be easier to supervise the next election, Jannati
said, because “the hopefuls are better known,” “Aftab-i Yazd”
reported. (Vahid Sepehri)

STUDENT ORGANIZATION FACES FOUR-MONTH SUSPENSION. A Yazd University
student association has been banned for permitting the reading of a
message from the banned Freedom Movement’s leader, Ebrahim Yazdi,
and for arranging a speech by Office for Strengthening Unity
central-council member Mehdi Aminzadeh, “Iran Daily” reported on 10
August. (The report did not say when the offense occurred.) The ban
lasts four months and began on 18 July. Three members of the student
association reportedly face charges of provoking student unrest and
participating in the July 1999 demonstrations in Tehran. (Bill Samii)

PARLIAMENT WANTS NUCLEAR PURSUITS TO CONTINUE. The parliamentary
presiding board received a draft plan addressing Iranian nuclear
activities from 238 out of 290 members of the legislature on 11
August, IRNA reported. The draft plan obliges Iran to pursue all
possible means to gain access to nuclear technology. The draft plan
also obliges the government to comply with its Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty commitments.
The previous day, Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi answered
legislators’ questions about the status of Iran’s nuclear
affairs, IRNA and state television reported on 10 August.
Tabriz representative Akbar Alami asked why Iran submitted to
pressure from the EU and the West instead of raising the issue at
international forums. Isfahan’s Ali Ahmadi asked why the
Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty was
implemented prior to legislative ratification.
Kharrazi responded that the nuclear account was handled
legally and added that Iran successfully overcame U.S. pressure and
propaganda. He said implementation of the Additional Protocol was
meant to fend off anti-Iranian propaganda and to alleviate a tense
atmosphere, and he explained that Tehran never officially confirmed
that it would implement the protocol before its ratification. “We
have rather said that Iran will cooperate with the IAEA within the
framework of the Additional Protocol,” he said.
Tehran’s Mohammad-Reza Bahonar said that Kharrazi’s
answers did not satisfy the legislators.
Kharrazi told reporters afterwards that Iran will resume
uranium enrichment when it sees fit, Fars News Agency reported, and
it suspended this activity as a confidence-building measure.
Parliamentary National Security and Foreign Policy Committee head
Alaedin Borujerdi later told reporters that unlike the previous
parliament, this one will support Iran’s right to nuclear
technology, IRNA reported on 10 August.
The legislators are not alone in their desire for a nuclear
capacity. Ali Akbar Velayati, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei’s adviser on scientific affairs, said in the 10 August
issue of “Kayhan” newspaper that Iran has a right to use nuclear
technology, not least because of its many scientific applications.
President Khatami said on 11 August that Iran has the right
to develop and use nuclear technology, state television reported. He
said: “Yes to the peaceful use of nuclear technology! This is our
national interest. This is our national honor. Our future development
depends on it.” “We are not going to ask for anyone’s
permission,” he added. “This is allowed by the international
covenants to which we are a signatory.” Khatami went on to say that
Iran voluntarily suspended enrichment of uranium but this does not
mean it will abandon the enrichment process. His comments come as the
legislature and the leadership stress Iran’s perceived right to a
nuclear capacity, and as the international community watches
developments with concern. (Bill Samii)

TEHRAN VOWS RESPONSE IN EVENT OF ‘U.S. OR NON-U.S.
AGGRESSION.’ Iranian Defense Minister Admiral Ali Shamkhani said
on 9 August that there is little the United States can do to Iran
beyond the imposition of sanctions and the leveling of accusations,
Al-Jazeera television reported. Shamkhani was reacting to U.S.
national security adviser Condoleezza Rice’s comments of 8
August, when she said Iran’s nuclear ambitions concern the
international community and Washington does not intend to let Iran
produce an atomic weapon, AP reported. Rice also accused Iran of
trying to hide a weapons program. “We cannot allow the Iranians to
develop a nuclear weapon,” Rice said on CNN’s “Late Edition.”
Shamkhani said the U.S. statements are inaccurate and relate to the
election campaign. “I say clearly that we shall respond to any U.S.
or non-U.S. aggression against our nuclear installations or any other
site in Iran,” he added. He said the U.S. presence in Iraq could be
used to Iran’s advantage.
Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) commander General
Yahya Rahim-Safavi told commanders of IRGC ground forces’
divisions and battalions on 11 August that Iran will retaliate if
Israel attacks, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) reported. He
said, “If Israel is mad enough to attack Iran’s national
interests, we will come down on them like a hammer and crush their
bones.” Rahim-Safavi accused the United States and Israel of
spreading “sedition, evil, and Muslim-killing” across the region. He
described his view of the U.S. aim in attacking Iraq: “Gaining
mastery over the energy resources of the Persian Gulf, Caucasus, and
Central Asia, assisting the Zionist regime’s security, changing
the region’s political systems and creating a Greater Middle East
are among America’s aims in the region.”
Iran test-fired the Shihab-3 missile on 11 August, Mehr News
Agency reported. According to the Ministry of Defense and Armed
Forces Logistics, this was a test of the latest modifications to the
missile, although it did not disclose the nature of those
modifications. Defense Minister Shamkhani had said on 7 August that
there would be upgrades to the missile’s range, ISNA reported.
The Shihab-3 reportedly has a range of 1,300 kilometers. Shamkhani
said this step is in response to Israeli efforts to increase the
range of their missiles.
Shamkhani also denied that Iran is developing a longer-range
Shihab-4 missile, saying, “Israel is scared of Iran’s defense
capability and, therefore, alleges that Iran’s defense capability
is a threat to Europe; however, I announce explicitly that we
threaten no European country and that the Islamic Republic of Iran
poses no threat to Europe.”
Asked about the missile test during an 11 August press
conference, U.S. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said, “The
United States has serious concerns about Iran’s missile programs
and views Iran’s efforts to further develop its missile
capabilities as a threat to the region and to United States
interests,” according to the department’s Bureau of International
Information Programs website (). Ereli added,
“We will continue to take steps to address Iran’s missile
efforts, and to work closely with other like-minded countries in
doing so.”
IRGC political-bureau chief Yadollah Javani said on 14 August
that the United States is unable to take military action against
Iran, and he also threatened Israel, Fars News Agency reported.
Referring to U.S. concern about the Iranian nuclear program, he said:
“Such threats are issued as part of psychological operations and they
are not real or serious threats. Regional and international
circumstances do not permit military action against Iran.” He added
in a reference to Iraq, “Given the circumstances, it is highly
unlikely that America will have the wherewithal to open another
front.”
Javani also dismissed the danger of Israeli action against
Iran. He said: “At present, all the areas under the sovereignty of
the Zionist regime, including the nuclear installations and the
atomic arsenal of that regime, are within range of Iran’s
advanced missiles. Therefore, neither the Zionist regime nor America
will carry out its threats because such actions are not
cost-effective.” (Bill Samii)

PAKISTANI FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS TEHRAN. Speaking at a 9 August news
conference in Tehran, Pakistani Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmud
Kasuri said the two countries enjoy friendly political and economic
relations, Islamabad’s PTV World reported. In a later telephone
interview with PTV World, Kasuri said he and Iranian counterpart
Kamal Kharrazi talked about Kharrazi’s recent trip to India.
Kasuri told Kharrazi that Pakistan has taken all the steps necessary
to guarantee the security of the Iran-Pakistan-India natural-gas
pipeline. Kasuri added that the two sides said there should be more
private-sector involvement in bilateral trade.
Iranian President Khatami told Kasuri on 9 August that their
respective countries should contribute to peace and security in
Afghanistan by investing there and in Central Asia, IRNA reported.
When he arrived in Tehran on 8 August, Kasuri said Islamabad wants to
see progress on the Iran-Pakistan-India natural-gas pipeline, PTV
World reported.
Kasuri left Tehran for Islamabad on 10 August, IRNA reported,
telling reporters at the airport that the trip was successful. He
said Islamabad would like to see an increase in bilateral trade.
Foreign Minister Kharrazi, who saw Kasuri off, referred to their
discussions about trade issues, elimination of tariff barriers, and
the transportation of Iranian natural gas to Pakistan.
Prior to his departure, Kasuri met with Expediency Council
Chairman Ayatollah Ali-Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani and briefed him on
New Delhi-Islamabad relations, PTV reported.
Meanwhile, the International Atomic Energy Agency has
determined that particles of enriched uranium that it found on
Iranian equipment originated in Pakistan, “The Jerusalem Post”
reported on 10 August, citing “Jane’s Defence Weekly.” (Bill
Samii)

KHATAMI CALLS FOR CLOSER TIES ON AZERBAIJAN VISIT… Azerbaijan and
Iran share a border, but this has not been enough to foster close
relations between the two. Iranian President Khatami visited
Azerbaijan in the first week of August, the first official trip to
the neighboring country by an Iranian leader in more than 10 years.
The three-day trip began on 5 August and featured talks
between Khatami and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. Speaking
after the meeting, Khatami called for closer bilateral ties. He said
history and geography have brought the fates of the two countries
together. “The border between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the
Republic of Azerbaijan is a border of peace, friendship, and
brotherhood,” Khatami said.
Khatami said an Azerbaijani consular office will open in the
northwestern Iranian city of Tabriz, the center of an Iranian
province where millions of ethnic Azeris live. The sides also signed
an agreement to improve road and rail links and to fund the building
of a power line between Imisli in southern Azerbaijan and Astara at
the Iranian border.
Azerbaijani leader Aliyev expressed satisfaction about the
agreements, saying he believes relations between Azerbaijan and Iran
are developing successfully. “The implementation of the agreements
signed will create thousands of jobs in Azerbaijan,” he said. “And
agreements on energy and gas swaps will allow us to provide [the
Autonomous Republic of] Nakhichevan, which is integral part of
Azerbaijan, with electricity and gas.”
On the political front, Aliyev praised Iran for what he
called its “support” for Azerbaijan in the conflict over the
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. “We have always felt Iran’s support in
the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh,”
he said. “And we are still feeling that today.”
Khatami said Iran is ready to contribute to a peaceful
solution of the conflict. He added that Iran considers
Nagorno-Karabakh part of Azerbaijan and that the use of force in
settling international problems is “unacceptable.”
However, talks did not produce any breakthrough on the issue
of the maritime borders of the Caspian Sea, which touches both
countries. The legal status of the Caspian, which contains large
reserves of oil and gas, has been in dispute since the Soviet Union
collapsed in 1991.
Davood Hermidas Bavand, who teaches international law in
Tehran, said the visit was important nevertheless. “The significance
of the visit is [the] development of good neighborly relationships
with Azerbaijan, bearing in mind that we have certain difficulties
with that state in connection with the Caspian Sea,” he said. “The
very objective of this visit is to [come to terms with] existing
problems. When the two parties accept this kind of communication,
it’s an indication that there is a certain intention for
improvement of the existing problems.”
Experts in Baku suggested the two sides would also discuss
the growing U.S. military presence in Azerbaijan, which has
contributed to the U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq. But neither
side was ready to comment.
Khatami addressed Azerbaijan’s parliament and met with
the parliamentary speaker. He is expected to visit Ganca,
Azerbaijan’s second-largest city, before returning to Iran.
(Antoine Blua, with RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service)

…AND SIGNS AGREEMENTS. During his trip to Baku, Khatami said Iran
wants “a stable, strong, and progressive” Azerbaijan, separated from
Iran by a frontier “of peace and friendship,” IRNA reported on 5
August. Officials from both countries signed 10 cooperation
agreements, IRNA also reported, including agreements on border trade,
terrorism, drug trafficking, and police training. Iran’s
Development and Export Bank will provide $75 million for electricity
projects in Azerbaijan and the two countries will also increase road
and rail links.
In Tehran, Hassan Noi-Muqaddam, a lawmaker for Ardabil, told
Fars News Agency on 5 August that Azerbaijani officials owe Iran an
apology for recent remarks made by Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov, who said Azeri speakers in Iran are “guests.” Azeris
form Iran’s second-largest ethnic group, and Iran is sensitive to
any talk of links between Iranian Azeris and Azerbaijan. “These
comments are influenced by the policies of the CIA and global
Zionism, which aim to divert healthy relations between Islamic states
to meet their own interests,” Muqaddam said. (Vahid Sepehrii)

IRAN ALLOCATES CREDIT FOR AZERBAIJANI ENERGY PROJECT. Baku’s
Bilik Dunyasi news agency reported on 9 August that the Export
Development Bank of Iran has allocated a $75 million credit for a
power line and substations between the towns of Imisli, Ali Bayramli,
and Astara. The project is intended to improve the quality of
electricity transmission from Iran to Azerbaijan, and it will require
reconstruction of three major substations. These are the 330-kilovolt
substation in Imisli, the 330-kilovolt substation in Ali Bayramli,
and the 220-kilovolt substation in Masalli. The report adds that a
new 200-kilovolt substation will have to be built in Salyan. The
project, which is expected to take 20-24 months, reportedly will
roughly double the amount of electricity Iran supplies to the
Nakhichevan exclave. (Bill Samii)

SUPREME LEADER’S ADVISER MEETS LEBANESE HIZBALLAH. Ali Akbar
Velayati, a former Iranian foreign minister and current adviser on
foreign affairs to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, met with
Lebanese Hizballah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut on 26
July, “Kayhan” reported on 27 July. Velayati later told IRNA in
Beirut that Iraq’s occupation by the U.S.-led coalition was
designed to loot the country’s oil and is a “plot against Middle
Eastern countries,” “Kayhan” added. He said that Iraq’s
“complicated” problems could only be resolved if Iraqi officials
consult Iraq’s neighbors, and he urged Iran, Syria, and Lebanon
to confront Washington’s “plans” for regime changes in the Middle
East, “Kayhan” reported. (Vahid Sepehri)

IRAN ENCOURAGES NORWEGIAN INVESTMENT. Iranian Industries and Mines
Minister Ishaq Jahangiri said during his visit to Oslo that Statoil,
the Norwegian oil company, is active in the South Pars oil field,
“Aftenposten” reported on 11 August. He continued, “We have also
asked the company to play a part in other regions and envisage
Statoil being an active cooperation partner in the future.”
Jahangiri said that a recent scandal in which Statoil
officials were dismissed and fined for the payment of money to win
influence in Iran would not undermine Statoil’s involvement there
(see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 22 and 29 September, 6, 13, and 27
October, 10 November 2003, and 5 July 2004). Jahangiri did warn the
Norwegians against corruption and influence buying, however. “There
is always a danger that some people could abuse their positions in
connection with major projects. The companies which become involved
in Iran must not make such abuses possible,” he said.
In Tehran, meanwhile, Petroleum Minister Bijan
Namdar-Zanganeh told the legislature that there is no evidence
connecting Statoil with any Iranian official in the aforementioned
scandal, and he promised that his ministry would continue to monitor
developments, IRNA reported on 11 August. (Bill Samii)

IRANIANS SEE CONSPIRACY BEHIND DIPLOMAT’S KIDNAPPING IN IRAQ.
Iranian consular official Fereidun Jahani disappeared on the highway
from Baghdad to Karbala on 8 August, IRNA and international news
agencies reported. Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi
initially refused to confirm whether or not Jahani had been
kidnapped. He did say, however, that “an armed group in Iraq has
released information about him and there is speculation about his
kidnapping, but we do not have sufficient information in this respect
yet.”
According to iht.com on 9 August, a video shown on
Al-Arabiyah television suggests Jahani was kidnapped by a group
called the Islamic Army in Iraq. They reportedly accuse Jahani of
provoking sectarian conflict in Iraq and warn Iran against
interference in Iraqi affairs.
Iranian Foreign Minister Kharrazi said during a 9 August news
conference in Tehran that Jahani is “in good health,” state
television reported. Kharrazi said Tehran has no other information on
Jahani’s status, adding, “We must find out which group has
kidnapped him and how we can arrange his release.”
Al-Jazeera television and Al-Alam television reported on 15
August that the Islamic Army of Iraq released a statement on 13
August announcing that unless Iran released 500 Iraqis held since the
Iran-Iraq War, it would take action against Jahani. Al-Alam added,
“Jahani was abducted by elements of the Mujahedin Khalq terrorist
organization,” and “the group planned the abduction in the corridors
of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman
Hamid Reza Assefi denied that there are any Iraqi prisoners of war in
Iran, IRNA reported. He said the identity of the kidnappers and the
nature of their demands are “suspicious.”
“Kayhan” newspaper Managing Director Hussein Shariatmadari,
who is appointed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, said on 9
August that only the United States has a motive for the Jahani
kidnapping, Mehr News Agency reported. That motive, he claimed, is
that Iran is blocking unspecified U.S. regional ambitions and it
opposes the U.S. occupation of Iraq. Shariatmadari claimed that the
kidnappers’ call on Iran not to interfere in Iraqi affairs is
identical to calls from U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and
Secretary of State Colin Powell, adding that this confirms the
kidnappers’ U.S. connection.
An anonymous “informed security official in Iraq” claimed on
9 August that U.S. intelligence agents had direct knowledge of the
kidnapping, Fars News Agency reported. This individual reportedly
went on to say that the United States has created “fake assassination
groups and [is] abducting non-native forces in Iraq,” and that
Washington is using Ba’athist groups to carry out abductions and
assassinations. The anonymous official also referred to the
involvement of “Israeli agents.”
Tehran-based journalist and filmmaker Mohammad-Hussein
Jafararian has traveled to Iraq several times in recent months, and
he told Radio Farda correspondent Siavash Ardalan on 9 August that
the kidnapping is part of a plot by some Iraqis to revive Iran-Iraq
hostility as way of limiting Iranian influence in their country.
“There are elements in Iraq who are against Iran’s successful and
influential presence in Iraq, and would like to revive hostilities
between the two countries,” he said.
Jafararian linked the kidnapping to a 2003 bombing in Karbala
that killed scores of participants. “The Polish Army investigated
that bombing and it is still not known who was responsible for
attacking the mourners and shedding the blood of so many,” he said.
The kidnapping, he added, is an anti-Iranian act, as was the Karbala
bombing. “Last year’s Karbala bombers and the kidnappers of the
diplomat appear to be following the same goal, which is to prevent
Iranians from going to Iraq’s Shi’ite holy cities of Karbala
and Al-Najaf, because they believe that the Iranians’ pilgrimage
is a guise for Iran’s interference in Iraq’s domestic
affairs,” he explained.
Jafararian went on to tell Radio Farda’s Ardalan that the
diplomat’s kidnapping and the bombing of the Karbala mourners
could have been the work of some Iraqi Shi’a groups who oppose
pro-Iran Shi’a groups. He added that in a recent trip to Al-Najaf
he did not feel safe, and the main threat was from the militiamen
following radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
“It appears that Tehran is determined to continue its
diplomatic efforts in Iraq, despite the heavy price it is paying for
it. This diplomacy may be dangerous and hazardous to some in Iraq,
but this does not mean that Iran should back out,” Jafararian
concluded. (Bill Samii)

TEHRAN SAYS IRAQI POLICE HOLDING CORRESPONDENTS AND BUSINESSMEN.
Hassan Kazemi-Qomi, the Iranian charge d’affaires in Baghdad,
confirmed on 11 August that two days earlier Iraqi police arrested
the head of the local Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) office,
Mustafa Darban, and several Iraqi reporters, ISNA reported. Reporters
Without Borders identified the correspondents on 12 August as
Mohammad Khafaji, Mohsen Madani, and Abu Ali.
Mohammad-Reza Ramezani, chairman of the Iranian Chamber of
Cooperatives, said on 11 August that U.S. troops arrested four
Iranian businessmen on 18 July and handed them over to Iraqi police
on 27 July, IRNA reported. The four were identified as Mohammad-Mehdi
Teimouri, Masoud Zareh, Yusef Muhseni, and Qasem Salehi. Ramezani
said the four were taken to an undisclosed location.
Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Seyyed Mohammad Sadr said on
15 August that Tehran is “almost” convinced that Iraqi police have
detained the IRNA personnel, but Tehran still cannot confirm this,
IRNA reported. He added that his ministry is constant touch with
Iraqi officials in an effort to secure the release of the IRNA
personnel. Amir Mohebbian, an editor of Iran’s “Resalat”
newspaper, said on 14 August that the IRNA personnel were arrested in
a calculated move to sever communication links between Iraq and the
outside world. (Bill Samii)

IRAQI PREMIER GETS OFFICIAL INVITATION TO TEHRAN. Radio Farda
reported on 10 August that Tehran has invited Iraqi Prime Minister
Iyad Allawi to visit Iran. The invitation comes at a tense time in
the two neighbors’ relations, as Iraqi Defense Minister Hazim
Sha’lan al-Khuza’i continues to accuse Iran of interfering in
his country’s affairs (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 9 August 2004).
In his most recent outburst, al-Khuza’i said on 9 August,
“Weapons manufactured in Iran were found in Al-Najaf in the hands of
those criminals, who received these weapons from the Iranian border,”
Al-Arabiyah television reported. He accused Iran of being Iraq’s
“first enemy.” Al-Khuza’i went on to say that Allawi will provide
details on this situation during his visit to Iran, and he said
information in Iraqi possession indicates official Iranian
involvement.
Iranian officials are unhappy with the Iraqi’s
accusations, with Interior Minister Hojatoleslam Abdolvahed
Musavi-Lari saying on 10 August that such anti-Iranian comments are
meant to appease the United States, IRNA reported. (Bill Samii)

AN IRANIAN CALL TO ARMS IN IRAQ. Tehran is speaking out against the
continuing violence in the Iraqi city of Al-Najaf, but large numbers
of Iranians are participating in the fighting there. Both Iranian
officials and the hard-line Iranian press are encouraging their
compatriots to play a more active role in Iraq.
“Jomhuri-yi Islami,” one of Iran’s more hard-line
newspapers, is calling for Iranians to act in defense of the holy
sites in Al-Najaf. An editorial in its 8 August issue said that
occupying Iraq and establishing a “servile government” there is not
enough for the United States. “They want to own Iraq for good and
forever,” the editorial said. It accused the United States of waging
“vicious and extensive psychological warfare against Muqtada
al-Sadr,” and it described the interim government as “a cast of
hand-picked actors.” The editorial said people are waiting for their
leaders to embark on “real action.” “Everything now indicates that
the time for such a decision and call is fast approaching,” it
concluded.
The next day, another “Jomhuri-yi Islami” editorial referred
to a “premeditated conspiracy to eliminate the forces of resistance”
in Iraq. It said that only the action of Shi’a religious leaders
and the masses could save the holy shrines. Cooperation between the
sources of emulation and officials in Iran to “end the crisis the
Americans have fomented” is important. Iraq has been turned over to
“foreign agents and alien lackeys,” and this is dangerous for Iran
and Islam. It concluded, “Has the time come for us to get up and go
after the crown of Islam, the very existence of the Shi’a, and
the national interests of the Islamic Republic of Iran?”
The newspaper’s urgings have not appeared in a vacuum,
and in light of official statements, they may elicit action. Earlier
this year, Tehran was encouraging volunteers for martyrdom operations
(suicide bombings) in Iraq (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 14 June 2004).
It is not yet clear if the volunteers have headed for Iraq.
Iranians, however, are making their presence felt there. Police in
Al-Najaf arrested an Iranian, an Egyptian, and a Jordanian who had
weapons of Iranian origin in their possession, Baghdad’s
Al-Sharqiyah television reported on 14 August. An Iraqi Interior
Ministry source said the weapons included RPGs, “Kalashnikovs” (it
did not specify if they were AK-47s, AK-74s, or AKMs), and machine
guns. Earlier media reports described more extensive Iranian
involvement in Iraq unrest (see “RFE/RL Iraq Report,” 12 August
2004). Iraqi police arrested 28 Iranians and three Afghans in Karbala
on 8 August, and they deported about 1,000 Iranians from the city on
7 August. The governor of Al-Najaf, Adnan al-Zurufi, said on 8
August: “There is Iranian support for al-Sadr’s group, and this
is no secret. We have information and evidence that they are
supplying the [Imam] Al-Mahdi Army with weapons and have found such
weapons in their possession,” Al-Sharqiyah reported.
Ali Akbar Velayati, a foreign-policy adviser to Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, said on 8 August that U.S. military
activities in the holy city of Al-Najaf will encourage resistance,
IRNA reported. “The Americans, by affronting holy sites across Iraq,
have now sown the seeds of combat and resistance, whose sibling will
be irrigated with the blood of martyrs and grow up stronger,”
Khamenei said. He also accused the United States of attacking Iraq in
order to control its oil resources.
The previous day, Khamenei said the United States is stuck in
Iraq, state radio reported. “If they go forward, they will be hit. If
they back up, they will still be hit. If they continue, they will be
hit; and if they withdraw, they will still be hit. They are mired
down there and a wolf which is caught in a trap might frighten some
people by screaming,” Khamenei told a group of theologians. Other
officials who have criticized events in Al-Najaf include Ayatollah
Nuri-Hamedani, parliamentary speaker Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, and
President Khatami.
Khamenei said in an 11 August speech to officials from the
Islamic Culture and Communications Organization, “The crime committed
by America in Iraq today, in Al-Najaf in particular, which is one of
the most holy sites of the Shi’a or perhaps one of the holiest
centers of all Muslims, is a black dot and a blot which arrogant
America can never erase from its face, never,” state television
reported. (Bill Samii)

*********************************************************
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

The “RFE/RL Iran Report” is a weekly prepared by A. William Samii on
the basis of materials from RFE/RL broadcast services, RFE/RL
Newsline, and other news services. It is distributed every Monday.

Direct comments to A. William Samii at [email protected].
For information on reprints, see:

Back issues are online at

http://www.wfn.org/2004/08/msg00057.html
http://usinfo.state.gov
http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
http://www.rferl.org/reports/iran-report/

Russian-Georgian tensions escalate

News & Analysis
Europe
Russia & the former USSR

Russian-Georgian tensions escalate
By Simon Wheelan
13 August 2004

There is mounting evidence that London and Washington are encouraging
the Georgian government to challenge Russia’s presence in the
breakawayrepublics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Strategically
situated between the Black Sea and the oil-rich Caspian, and sitting
astride two key oil and gas pipelines, Georgia borders Russia, Turkey,
Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Since being installed in power following a US-backed coup last
December which usurped former President Eduard Shevardnadze, Georgia’s
President Mikhail Saakashvili has made clear that he intends to
reunify his fractured republic by force if necessary.

Having wrested back control over the coastal region of Adjaria and the
major port of Batumi in May, Georgia has stepped up its threats
against Abkhazia and there have been reports that its troops are
massing on the border with South Ossetia where Russian troops are
stationed.

In the early hours of Thursday August 12, at least three people where
killed after an exchange of fire on the Georgian side of the border,
near the village of Eredi. South Ossetia said that Georgian forces had
opened fire first, injuring seven people on its side of the
border. But a Russian colonel was initially quoted as stating that
South Ossetia had fired first, although he later changed his account.

The deaths come after tensions between Tbilisi and Moscow had reached
new depths in the last weeks. On July 20, Saakashvili threatened to
renounce the 12-year-old deal whereby Georgian, Russian and South
Ossetian forces have patrolled the breakaway republic. And on Tuesday
August 3, Saakashvili announced on television that his forces were
ready to attack ships that `illegally’ enter the waters off Abkhazia.

Georgia lost control of the waters over a decade ago. Nonetheless
Saakashvili warned, `I earlier ordered… that we should immediately
open fireon, and sink, every ship which enters Abkhazia.’

The Black Sea coast is a popular destination for Russian holidaymakers
arriving by boat from the nearby Russian resort of Sochi. Russian
tourists should ` pay attention’ to his words, Saakashvili
threatened. Just days earlier a Georgian patrol boat had fired at a
civilian vessel in the Black Sea.

A Russian foreign minister said that the threats showed `Tbilisi wants
to play with fire’. In a statement Moscow warned, `Any attempts to
injure or threaten the lives of Russian citizens will receive the
necessary rebuff.’

Just two days after making his provocative remarks, Saakashvili was
meeting with US Secretary of State Colin Powell in Washington. Despite
claiming that he wanted to avoid any confrontation with Russia, and
was seeking to `calm tensions’, Saakashvili again warned Russian
tourists that, `Abkhazia is no place for rest. It is a war zone, from
where 300,000 Georgians have been expelled ‘.

Saakashvili has boasted of his daily contact with Powell and US
National Security adviser Condolezza Rice and obviously feels
emboldened by his links with the western powers. In recent months
Georgia has strengthened its tieswith NATO and has received some $1
billion in aid from the European Union.

Tbilisi has demanded that its forces control the South Ossetian
entrance to the tunnel beneath the Caucasus linking North Ossetia, in
Russia, to South Ossetia in Georgia, supposedly to clamp down on the
trade in contraband.

Exacerbating this potentially explosive situation is the fact that
British and US military forces are currently involved in training the
Georgian army, effectively inciting them to challenge the Russian
presence in the breakaway republics.

During his visit to London last month for talks with Prime Minister
Tony Blair, Saakashvili stated brazenly that, `Britain is becoming
more involved in the region and not only on the (Trans-Caucasus)
pipeline. We just had last week joint training of UK Special Forces
together with the Georgian armyâ=80=9D.

Saakashvili boasted that Britain was now the third biggest contributor
to the Georgian armed forces after the US and Turkey.

According to the Times newspaper, it is believed that approximately
160 British troops are involved in training Georgian forces. Simulated
military operations, named the `Georgian Express 2004′, took place
July 5-18 at a military base in Vaziani. During exercises soldier’s
practised techniques in establishing checkpoints and patrols-all of
which have been essential to the Georgian army’s recent incursions
into South Ossetia.

In a qualitative deepening of the relationship between Tbilisi and
London, Saakashvili also revealed that British General Sir Garry
Johnson was now permanently based in the Georgian Defence Ministry to
co-ordinate ongoing military assistance. A light infantry detachment
took part in exercises with Georgian commandos and further exercises
are scheduled with British advisers training Georgian officers and
NCOs.

Earlier in the year the Pentagon decided to privatise its military
presence in Georgia by contracting the work to a group of retired US
military officers.

At the time a senior western diplomat told the Guardian newspaper,
`One of the goals is to make the army units capable of seizing and
defending a given objective’.

The US has maintained a presence in Georgia since 2002 when military
trainers and advisers arrived in the country, ostensibly to combat Al
Qaeda forces said to be in the Georgian Pankisi Gorge on the border
with Chechnya. World Socialist Web Site

NKR FM: NKR Committed to Strengthening of Statehood & Armed Forces

“REMAINING DEVOTED TO EXCEPTIONALLY PEACE SETTLEMENT OF CONFLICT, NKR
WILL CONTINUE STRENGTHENING OF STATEHOOD AND ARMED FORCES OF COUNTRY
IN FUTURE,” STATEMENT OF NKR FOREIGN MINISTRY SAYS

YEREVAN, August 9 (Noyan Tapan). “The authorities of the country
consider supporting of a high level of readiness for action of the
troops of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic to be an important condition
for provision of military security of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic
and its people, especially in the presence of constant militant
appeals of Azerbaijan for forcilble solution of the Karabakh problem,”
the statement of the Press Service of the NKR Foreign Ministry made in
connection with the statement of Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry,
condemning the beginning of military exercises of the NKR Defence Army
says.

According to the statement of the Press Service of NKR Foreign
Ministry, the Defence Army of NKR, which is an important element of
preservation of regional stability, actually, plays the role of a
restraining factor under the conditions of tenseness forced by
Azerbaijan and absence of international peace-making forces in the
zone of the conflict. The Press Service of NKR Foreign Ministry also
declared that “remaining devoted to exceptionally peace settlement of
the conflict the Karabakh side will continue strengthening of the NKR
statehood and its Armed Forces as an importnant structure defending
the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic in order to avoid a new armed aggression by Azerbaijan.”

Philadelphia: Student is honored for genocide studies

Student is honored for genocide studies

Philadelphia Inquirer
Sunday, Aug. 01, 2004

By Wendy Walker, Inquirer Suburban Staff

WEST CHESTER, PA – For Jonathan Coull, winning the award from the
Pennsylvania Association of Graduate Students for best graduate thesis was
an honor, sure.

But getting to the awards ceremony at Bloomsburg University in June was a
real challenge.

Coull, who will receive his master’s degree in Holocaust and Genocide
Studies from West Chester University later this summer, had sold his Honda
to pay his expenses. He ended up having to beg a ride from a friend who
delivers pizzas.

“The stereotype of a starving graduate student, that’s pretty much him,”
said one of his professors, William Hewitt.

Coull’s master’s thesis, “Imperial Gods: The Second Reich’s Stolen History
and its Evolution to Nazism,” explores the complicity of the German
government in the Armenian genocide during World War I.

“The [awards] committee liked the idea that I questioned the operating
procedure for the Western world,” Coull said. “The slogan ‘Never forget?’
It’s a failure. It’s not something that we live by. We need to change the
way we see the world.”

Coull wrote most of the award-winning thesis in the Sender Fredjowicz Study
Room at the university’s library. Named after a Holocaust survivor, the room
houses books, documents, videotapes, microfilm and artwork – and a small
Oriental rug on which Coull confessed to napping during his long hours of
work.

Coull, 33, attended Upper Merion High School then graduated from East
Stroudsburg University in 1994 with a degree in criminal justice and
sociology. He spent two years in the Army, then did social work for Delaware
County Children and Youth Services, Northwestern Human Services, and other
agencies.

Tired out from social work, he took a trip to Eastern Europe and visited the
concentration camps at Auschwitz and Birkenau, where a question lodged deep
in his soul: “Where do people get these sick ideas? It’s just wrong.”

When he returned home, the question continued to haunt him, and in 2000, he
decided to enroll at West Chester to pursue a graduate degree.

“I sold my Honda. I left a really nice King of Prussia apartment. I took out
student loans,” he said. “I wondered about my sanity.”

In the Armenian genocide, the political group ruling the Ottoman Empire,
known as the Young Turks, systematically deported, tortured and killed most
of the Armenians living in the empire during World War I. According to the
Armenian National Institute, 1.5 million Armenians were killed between 1915
and 1923.

Hewitt said that after Coull started studying the Armenian genocide, “he
really took off with it… . I guess you could say that I cast little grains
of sand, and he grabbed hold of it and really ran with it and made it into a
pearl.”

While earning his graduate degree and working on his thesis, Coull also
learned German, served as a teaching assistant, and helped to organize the
university’s Holocaust collection. “He did yeoman’s work on that,” Hewitt
said.

It was an intense period, Coull said: “I was in the zone. The outside world
would just wash away.”

He said the horrific nature of much of what he read took an emotional toll.
“I would get depressed,” he said. “There were times I wept, for sure.”

Hewitt said that Coull’s thesis is a good basis for a Ph.D. thesis and “he
could get a really nice little monograph out of it.” Coull said he wants to
apply to doctoral programs to pursue his research, particularly at the
University of Toronto’s Zoryan Institute, but can’t afford it right now.

“I love the scholarly life. I love being an academic,” he said, “but the
transitions are brutal. You gotta pay the rent. What I need now is to get a
job.”

Send education news to suburban staff writer Wendy Walker, The Inquirer, 120
N. High St., West Chester, Pa. 19380; e-mail it to [email protected];
or fax to 610-701-7630. Contact Wendy Walker at 610-701-7651 or
[email protected].

HH Aram I Receives Former Secretary General of The Lebanese CP

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I RECEIVES FORMER SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE LEBANESE
COMMUNIST PARTY

ANTELIAS, LEBANON, July 30 (Noyan Tapan). His Holiness Aram I received
George Hawi, the former Secretary General of the Lebanese Communist
Party, at St. Mary’s Armenian Monastery in Bikfaya. As the
Catholicosate of Cilicia Communication and Information Department
reports, they discussed the Lebanese National Reconciliation Project,
which has been established by Mr Hawi. Praising the project, His
Holiness spoke of the importance of strengthening national unity in
Lebanon by basing that unity on democratic principles. He further
spoke of Lebanon’s important role as the link between the West and the
Arab countries. Finally, His Holiness spoke of the importance of
preserving community rights and of strengthening the relations between
the Lebanese state and its people.

Kocharian to watch olympic games on August 23

ArmenPress
July 29 2004

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN TO WATCH OLYMPIC GAMES ON AUGUST 23

YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS: Iskhan Zakarian, chairman of a
government department on physical training and sports, said today
president Kocharian will travel to Greece on August 23 to watch
Olympic Games. The Armenian delegation to Athens is composed of 52
people, 6 of whom are sporting journalists.

AAA: Armenia This Week – 07/26/2004

ARMENIA THIS WEEK
Monday, July 26, 2004

U.S. ENVOY COMPLETES ARMENIA TOUR, SEES “ACROSS THE BOARD” PROGRESS IN
RELATIONS
U.S. Ambassador John Ordway, who is completing his three-year tour in
Armenia later this week, said he was encouraged by the “really strong
improvement in relations” between the United States and Armenia. Ordway, who
is due to assume the post of the U.S. Ambassador to Kazakhstan, will be
replaced by Ambassador John Evans, a decorated foreign service veteran with
experience in Eastern Europe and Iran.

In his farewell press conference last week, Ordway said there was “across
the board” progress in bilateral relations, noting particularly “remarkable
improvement” in the military and security relations, deeper cooperation via
the U.S.-Armenia Task Force and successes of U.S. assistance programs in
Armenia.

At the same time, Ordway said that last year’s elections and post-election
political confrontation were the “biggest disappointment.” While noting the
civil society’s development, Ordway said that everyone’s hopes were for more
rapid progress. The U.S. envoy further urged the Armenian opposition to end
its boycott and return to the parliament in order to “work together to
achieve solid aims for the country.”

Turning to Armenian-Turkish relations, Ordway said that since “Armenia has a
policy of being ready to improve relations and open the border without any
preconditions” the focus was “to have Turkey take more steps towards
improving the relationship.” Commenting on recent activation of the Karabakh
peace process, Ordway said that “while it is a little early to tell whether
[an agreement] would be possible” there is renewed hope for some progress.

Ordway dismissed frequent speculations that Armenia was somehow a
“pro-Russian country.” “To Armenia’s credit it has not pursued a sort of
single vector direction for its foreign policy,” Ordway said, pointing again
to the development of U.S.-Armenia relations and Armenia’s efforts to
integrate into the international trade system and with Europe.

Also last week, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh hosted a delegation of U.S. and
European non-government representatives led by Bruce Jackson, a former
Pentagon official and President of the U.S. Committee on NATO, a group that
has facilitated NATO expansion into Eastern Europe. Meeting with Presidents
Robert Kocharian and Arkady Ghoukasian, Jackson pledged to work for greater
U.S. and European involvement in the settlement of the Karabakh and other
post-Soviet conflicts. Ghoukasian urged an end to a militant rhetoric by
Azerbaijan as the first necessary step towards reconciliation. (Sources:
Arminfo 7-22, 23; Mediamax 7-22)

AZERI PRESIDENT SACKS SECURITY CHIEF
President Ilham Aliyev dismissed Azerbaijan’s long-time National Security
Minister Namik Abbasov last Friday, replacing him with a mid-level police
official. In charge of the Ministry for nearly a decade, 64-year-old Abbasov
had been a key sponsor of anti-Armenian and pro-war propaganda actions and
rhetoric. Abbasov’s agents also sought to shut down peace-building contacts
between Armenian and Azeri civic groups.

Most Azeri commentators linked Abbasov’s sacking to Ilham Aliyev’s effort to
create a new, more loyal ruling structure. They point to Abbasov’s unusually
cordial relations with the opposition and his initial reluctance to endorse
Ilham as a successor to his father, Heydar Aliyev. The Azeri daily Zerkalo
reported that Abbasov was in Europe last week and unaware of the President’s
decision. Five of Abbasov’s immediate predecessors were either exiled or
imprisoned following their dismissals.

A former Communist Party apparatchik and Heydar Aliyev’s protégé, Abbasov
rose through the ranks of the Soviet Azeri KGB to become its deputy director
by the late 1980s. During anti-Aliyev purges in Azerbaijan, Abbasov
relocated to Russia to head a provincial KGB office there. Upon returning to
Azerbaijan, Abbasov promoted Stalinist-style paranoia of foreign and
opposition “conspiracies,” and branded all Azeri POWs in the war over
Karabakh as “traitors.”

The new National Security Minister, 47-year-old Eldar Mahmudov, was only
recently reinstated as a department chief within the Ministry of Interior
and put in charge of narcotics trafficking. In 1999 Mahmudov was sacked as
Interior Ministry’s department chief in charge of economic crimes on the
insistence of Western companies working in Azerbaijan who claimed they were
harassed by Mahmudov’s department. Analysts at Azerbaijan’s leading news
agency Turan suggested that an appointment of a policeman to lead the Azeri
successor to the KGB showed that President Aliyev distrusted Abbasov and his
cadres. (Sources: AAA R&I; Armenia This Week 7-11-03, 1-30, 3-26, 6-25;
Azertag.com 7-23; Turan 7-23; Zerkalo 7-24)

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Prosecuters reshuffled to be immune from local influence

ArmenPress
July 23 2004

PROSECUTORS RESHUFFLED TO BE IMMUNE FROM LOCAL INFLUENCE

YEREVAN, JULY 23, ARMENPRESS: Armenia’s chief prosecutor Aghvan
Hovsepian explained today that a major reshuffle of prosecutors last
week was to keep them immune from, as he put it, “the local
influence.” He also said the reshuffle was in line with the principle
of rotation of prosecutors.
Speaking to reporters, the chief prosecutor also argued that “some
of prosecutors have already exhausted themselves,” saying some new
and younger prosecutors are expected to work more effectively.
Under a recent decree by president Robert Kocharian, who is
entitled by the Constitution to appoint and dismiss prosecutors, 70
percent of all prosecutors were replaced, including all prosecutors
of Yerevan communities and heads of two divisions of the chief
prosecutor’s office.
Hovsepian said also that 27 prosecutors were dismissed by various
reasons in the first six months of this year. New appointees will
have from now on to get the approval of a special attestation
commission and go through an interview with members of the ruling
board of the prosecutor’s office. The entire staff of the office now
is 601 employees.

Genocide in Sudan

Harvard University Gazette, MA
July 22 2004

Genocide in Sudan
SPH’s Leaning investigates and urges action
By Ken Gewertz
Harvard News Office

The international community has not succeeded very well at stopping
incidents of genocide. From Armenia to Rwanda, efforts at
intervention have generally been either nonexistent or too little and
too late.

The fact that new opportunities to finally get it right occur with
distressing regularity can hardly be regarded as a positive factor,
yet for those who seek to mitigate human suffering, these
opportunities are still a powerful call for action and hope.

These young people have settled at a refugee “location” (not a camp)
near Chad’s border with Sudan. The United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) has moved most refugees in such settlements to
camps because of the danger posed by frequent cross-border attacks by
Sudanese militia. This group feared that UNHCR would not be able to
transfer them to camps before the rainy season began. (Photo courtesy
of Physicians for Human Rights)
The Darfur region of western Sudan is the latest area to give rise to
such a call. The non-Arab inhabitants of this poor and arid region
have become the direct targets of attack by a loosely organized Arab
militia known as Janjaweed, with apparent backing by military forces
controlled by the Sudanese government. The conflict arises in a
context of resource constraints and was initially described as a
response to two rebel groups who formed against the Sudanese
government. But in the past 16 months it has evolved into a vicious
program of terror and death, aimed at destroying the livelihoods of
the non-Arabs and driving them off their land.

The Arab marauders have swept into non-Arab villages in Darfur,
murdering the men, raping the women, burning houses, stealing
livestock, and forcing the survivors to flee into larger towns in
Darfur or across the border into Chad. So far, more than a million
non-Arab Darfurians have been displaced within Darfur and another
200,000 have sought refuge in Chad.

In May, Jennifer Leaning, professor of international health in the
School of Public Health, spent two weeks observing conditions and
interviewing Darfurian refugees along the Chad border as part of an
investigative team sponsored by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR).
The team’s report was published June 23.

Jennifer Leaning, professor of international health in the School of
Public Health, was part of an investigative team that reported on the
conditions of Darfurian refugees along the Chad border. Leaning says,
`What has been delivered to the government of Sudan, very forcibly I
think, in the last couple of weeks, is the message: `Hold on to any
of your expectations, guys. You are not going to be readmitted back
into the community of good nations until you adequately settle this
problem in Darfur.” (Staff photo Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard News
Office)

Since her return, Leaning has appeared on radio and TV programs and
has visited Washington to urge government officials to take action.
At the moment, she said, the prospects for mobilizing some sort of
intervention seem to be looking up.

“I would say that things are looking more hopeful, largely because
just in the last three weeks there has been a progressive groundswell
of discussion about what’s going on in Darfur. More and more media
outlets are handling the story, and there are higher- and
higher-level discussions in government and in national institutions
about actually doing something.”

What PHR and other human rights groups hope to do is pressure the
Sudanese government to end its support of Janjaweed and force the
group to stop its genocidal campaign in Darfur. According to Leaning,
there is some possibility of accomplishing this goal because Sudan
has been looking forward to improving its standing with the
international community as a reward for ending its long-running civil
war between the north and the south.

“What has been delivered to the government of Sudan, very forcibly I
think, in the last couple of weeks, is the message: ‘Hold on to any
of your expectations, guys. You are not going to be readmitted back
into the community of good nations until you adequately settle this
problem in Darfur.'”

Secretary of State Colin Powell has recently visited Sudan to make
his own assessment of the situation in Darfur. He is the
highest-ranking U.S. official to visit the country in several
decades. Andrew Natsios, the administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) accompanied him. UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has also recently traveled to Darfur.
And, according to Leaning, President Bush has been in communication
with Sudanese President Umar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir. Human rights
organizations would like Bush and leaders in other countries to apply
greater pressure on al-Bashir to fulfill a promise he made June 19
that he would call off the Janjaweed militia.

The visits of Powell and Annan have helped to raise the visibility
and urgency of the need to organize a response to this ongoing attack
on a civilian population. “But Powell only went to the areas that are
already well traveled. He didn’t see the most isolated and trapped –
and he did not complain about that. We are still not putting enough
pressure on the Sudanese government to bring about an immediate end
to this conflict and this policy of obstruction of aid,” Leaning
said.

But even with high-level officials beginning to pay attention to the
genocidal activity in Darfur, a favorable outcome to the situation is
anything but assured. Already, many thousands have died, and many
thousands more have been rendered homeless and at risk of disease and
death in a harsh, unforgiving environment. The rainy season has now
arrived, washing out primitive roads and making it all but impossible
to bring food, water, and supplies to the refugees, except by
airlift. Even under present conditions, trucking supplies to the
displaced persons in Darfur has proved difficult because of efforts
by the Sudanese government to obstruct access.

“This part of the world is very hard to survive in,” said Leaning.
“When people are driven from their water sources and land, when their
animals are killed or stolen, it deprives them of their source of
livelihood. Then, if they can’t get outside aid, they will die.”

Even if people are able to wait out the rainy season, returning to
their land afterward is absolutely essential to ensure their
continued survival, for that is when they must plant crops for the
next harvest, Leaning said.

A further concern is that the Sudanese government will fail to
respond to pressure and change its policy in Darfur. In this case,
the matter will have to be brought before the UN Security Council,
with the possibility of greater coercive measures adopted, including
sending troops under a Chapter VII mandate, perhaps invoking the
Genocide Convention of 1948.

“The problem now,” said Leaning, “is that the United States has not
publicly stated what we all know to be the case: that the Sudanese
government is responsible for supporting this conflict in Darfur, for
obstructing humanitarian aid, and for arming the Janjaweed. Nor has
the U.S. managed to persuade major European nations to back a stiff
UN Security Council resolution that calls the Sudanese government to
account and demands immediate action.”

———
Jennifer Leaning (holding notebook) talks to the leader of the Goz
Amer refugee camp. The man in the blue shirt at left and the woman
behind Leaning to the right are both translators working with the
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) team. Because of the sensitive
nature of testimony given by female refugees, many of whom were
raped, PHR interviewed men and women separately. Leaning, working
with a female translator, interviewed women who had been raped or
suffered other forms of sexual violence. (Photo courtesy of
Physicians for Human Rights)

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2004/07.22/01-sudan.html